seen to th e eð. ucation of th eir children, _________u________u__uu__uu___________________uu______uuu____u____________u______________u____hu__u__uu_____u__ live placidly on a fisherman cruiser, sailing south down the V\- aterway in the fal] and back north in the spring. Dale asked Emmett if he had heard anything new about the future of the Dismal Swamp Canal, and Emmett said that it was the same old story: more and more traffic was shying away from it in fa vor of an alternate, deeper route-the Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal- and consequently the contInued opera- tion of the ancient cut through the swamp was in jeopardy. About the only remaining supporters of the Dis- lTIal Swamp Canal, it seemed, were a few impressionable mariners, who were partial to its gloomy charm, and the residents of Elizabeth City (pop., 14,062), who stood to suffer econom- ically in the event of its closing. T ra vellers everywhere are familiar with the peculiar sense of awakening and parting that comes over a ship's passengers the last day or so before the end of a voyage. We shared this experience, even though the Coastal Queen was all but landlocked at her Elizabeth City mooring, and Mr. Col- lins and I were lTIoved to go ashore and inquire about flights out of Norfolk the next day-to Miami for him and to New York for me. Later that after- noon, the Coastal Queen sailed a few miles up the river to her final anchorage of the trip. It was on the very edge of the Great Dismal Swamp, where the water at twilight turned all shades of oyster, peach, and olive gray. The Great Dismal is thirty miles long and about as wide, and it once covered an area of twenty-two hundred square miles, which made it the second-largest swamp in the country, surpassed only by the Everglades, but over the years much of the original swamp has been reclaimed by drainage and converted to farmland. In 1929, the government bought the canal, which had been built by the Great Dismal Swamp Land Company in Washington's time, and the Army Engineers have since re- placed the old locks at either end. The swamp was given its name by Colonel \Villiam Byrd, a member of an ex- pedition that, in 1 728, determined the -y ^ ^ _'y boundary between Virginia and North - ". .:-w " ^ Carolina. Bvrd was also the first man to ..... Y\.: Y. ..'"< '^' consider digging a canal through the swamp, though he can scarcely be said to have been fond of the place In his "History of the Dividing Line," he wrote: THE NE,W YORKER Since the Surveyors had enter'd the Dismal, they had laid Eyes on no living Creature: neither Bird nor Beast, Insect nor Reptile came in View. Doubtless, the 191 ft 1 '- '::0::: . tr<" ":-:., t . .. . f' ..... '* ./ ;. ", ',,:.:.: "... .// .:. :.x " ". ":::::.' .;s: .... .... .:.:: ,,":. : r ">>/ : . " ". ".: ..... ";;:: -h .'* "....:: <:; :;:: Ñ. 4' . :. -": ' ....... -...-.................... This Pattern Hasn't Been Seen Around For AIDlost A Century Why did we recreate it? Simply because it's beautiful and was no longer available. It's copied from historic Leeds pottery, but we make this Leeds Mug in translucent Crown Staffordshire bone china - exquisitely virgin white. And that's white! Use it to serve coffee, mulled wine, or hot toddies It's the first of a new group that will be followed by a teapot and then a cream and sugar. A rare group for collectors Most unusual Christmas gifts. The Mug is 3%" high; $9.50 each. : :fl INC' NEW YORK 10010 Ellis-Barker Silver Companles __u_u__uuu______ Available at John Wanamaker and other fine storesuuuuu-uuu- ð:.... *,.. HOW .:. ROUS THE WORLD Q:F' . ..:: :.:.:... ;" : ' m". GEORGES\B IARD! a world of auto . ation wi . an elegant flair' / Where the hóstess can relax -II< in carefree dalliance / because her Briard Hot : utler is at hand / to keep f.. :. ... ali" gly warm right at table' of @uffet / thrJ6::h all eternity / " f .(! ;fØ .:.. ." .:,::::. þ- " 1 n""""-, . e ': ." ':::::., .$< ! t ,;, -:::. 1 ... I ..w.. . . "-..:....... ) ---; . ,.:: .....: w -.....,,;:,: .:.:.: ..:.:". ::: t :::.:^ >. :.. :;!t .}.. t" The 'ì.emarkably efficient Hot Butler food-warmer tray is automatic, electric and resplendent in walnut and gold and gleaming ?'vhite. 5.95 to 65.00. By WOODLAND. At fine stores like B. Altman, New York. Jos. Horne, Pittsbu1.gh . lJlay-D&F Denver J. L. Hudson, Det'ì'oit . Frost Bros., San Antonio I M. Wille Inc., 225 5th Ave., N. Y. ::<? ::::" . .. .. .. ! : .. \.t ".-:. :to /'\.... -'? > :;: : : :':I'..t .. .. . O/.:;:: .::: ;:::